Ricardian Register Richard III Society, Inc. Vol. 45 No. 4 December, 2014 Richard III Forever Printed with permission l Mary Kelly l Copyright © 2012 In this issue: Bosworth 1485 Were They Really Called That? Ricardian Review 2014 Annual Reports Inside cover (not printed) Contents Bosworth 1485 2 Were They Really Called That? 7 From the Editor 9 Letters to the Editor 10 Message from American Branch Chairman 10 AGM Banquet Entertainment 11 2014 Dickon Award 12 Ricardian Review 13 2014 Annual Reports 20 Chairman’s Report 20 Treasurer’s Report 21 Editor’s Report 26 Sales Office Report 26 Chapters' Advisor Report 27 Illinois Chapter Report 27 Michigan Chapter Report 28 New England Chapter Report 28 Tidewater Chapter (DC-MD-VA) Report 29 Row, Row, Row Your Boat… 30 Board, Staff, and Chapter Contacts 34 Membership Application/Renewal Dues 35 Submission guidelines 36 ~ ©2014 Richard III Society, Inc., American Branch. No part may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means mechanical, electrical or photocopying, recording or information storage retrieval—without written permission from the Society. Articles submitted by members remain the property of the author. The Ricardian Register is published four times per year. Subscriptions for the Register only are available at $25 annually. In the belief that many features of the traditional accounts of the character and career of Richard III are neither supported by sufficient evidence nor reasonably tenable, the Society aims to promote in every possible way research into the life and times of Richard III, and to secure a re-assessment of the material relating to the period, and of the role in English history of this monarch. The Richard III Society is a nonprofit, educational corporation. Dues, grants and contributions are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. Dues are $60 annually for U.S. Addresses; $70 for international. Each additional family member is $5. Members of the American Society are also members of the English Society. Members also receive the English publications. All Society publications and items for sale may be purchased either direct at the U.K. Member’s price, or via the American Branch sales when available. Papers and books may be borrowed from the US fiction and non-fiction libraries. Papers only are available from the English Librarian. When a U.S. Member visits the U.K., all meetings, expeditions and other activities are open, including the AGM, where U.S. Members are welcome to cast a vote. Society Internet address: www.r3.org Web status updates: r3member.blogspot.com Changes of address and dues payments to: Sally Keil, Membership Chair 1219 Route 171 • Woodstock, CT 06281-2126 [email protected] 1 Bosworth 1485 How Does a King End Up Buried Under a Parking Lot? John Erath In September 2012, an odd story hit news wires around the world. A skeleton found under a parking lot in central England proved to be that of Richard III, the last king of England to be killed in battle, made famous by Shakespeare as a tyrant and murderer. In the months that followed, more information on the remains emerged, revealing that Richard was not the evil, deformed figure of Shakespeare’s play, but a man of average height, with curvature of the spine, intestinal parasites and horrific battle wounds.1 Thanks to modern forensics, we now have a clearer picture of the man behind the legend that has led to a reassessment of his rule, showing Richard to have been a promising king and able administrator. But what sort of leader ends up under a parking lot? Although a capable strategist, he did not fit the character of Shakespeare's villain who could “set the murderous Machiavel to school.”2 An analysis of Richard’s actions during the 1485 rebellion shows his decision to meet his enemies in battle personally was consistent with his political goals and interests, and with contemporary military practice. On August 22, 1485, he fought at Bosworth Field under favorable terms but managed to lose the battle, his crown and his life to the future Henry VII, founder of the Tudor dynasty. Over 500 years later, the events of that day are somewhat obscure, but it seems clear that Richard’s defeat can be attributed to key assumptions that proved wrong, placing trust in unreliable allies and not concentrating the full forces available to him before the battle. The Battle of Bosworth was the final major engagement of a generation of dynastic conflict in England commonly (and inaccurately) referred to as “The Wars of the Roses,” a term invented after the fact. From 1452 on, various descendents of Edward III fought for the throne with the result that royal succession came to be determined by conquest rather than dynastic rules. The various conflicts were fought mainly by feudal forces, with some mercenaries, under the command of noblemen. However, the armies of 15th century England were composed of professionals, recruited from towns and feudal estates, not mobs of armed peasants.3 The Hundred Years War had left England with a large number of skilled veterans and experienced commanders. The wars in France also shaped how the nobles contesting the English throne made strategic decisions. While Medieval European wars often focused on sieges of fortified places, English leaders had a tradition of winning pitched battles against France and therefore generally sought decisive victory on the battlefield. The costs of paying and supplying professional armies also imposed limitations on campaign durations and further motivated commanders toward battle. English successes in France had been won on the power of the longbow, but by the second half of the 15th century, longbows slowly gave way to firearms, lethal over distances, without requiring the lifestyle commitment of archery. By 1485, including at Bosworth, archers had taken on the role of skirmishers, especially when opposing armies both fielded such troops.4 In his early 16th century account of Bosworth, historian Polydore Vergil wrote that “They making suddenly great shouts, assaulted the enemy first with arrows, … then with hand-strokes.”5 Early field artillery was also available, although more commonly used in siege warfare. At Bosworth, most of both armies consisted of infantry, heavily armored men-at-arms organized into companies of about 100 men. Fifteenth century armies used cavalry primarily for scouting. The chivalric idea of mounted knights charging the enemy still remained a tactical option, but only when missile troops who could easily target such formations had been neutralized. Military leaders learned strategic and tactical concepts from translations of the late Roman writer Vegetius, whose De Rei Militari had been turned 2 into a set of English language maxims entitled Knyghthode and Bataile in the mid 15th century. Richard III owned a copy of this work, which also contained instructions for training and maintaining military forces.6 Because Knyghthode and Bataile only considered military means as the basis for strategy in times of wars, most 15th century leaders focused their strategic decisions on the military means available. When Edward IV died in 1483, his brother Richard used doubts as to the legitimacy of Edward's young children to take the throne as Richard III.7 He had the support of much of the elite, who likely saw Richard as an experienced leader and preferable to a child as a ruler. However, almost from the outset, Richard's rule faced threats from disaffected nobles who had supported Henry VI, whom Edward deposed in 1471. The removal of kings had become the norm in England; from 1399 to 1485, four out of six monarchs lost their positions by force and another nearly did so. To prosecute the wars against France, English kings had come to rely on the nobility to raise trained warriors. When these forces were not needed against a foreign enemy, they remained available as instruments of domestic politics. At first, opposition to Richard was led by his former ally, the Duke of Buckingham, then, after Buckingham's execution for treason in 1483, coalesced around Henry Tudor, the Earl of Richmond, who landed in Wales from France on August 1, 1485. According to histories, such as those of Vergil and Thomas More, written under the patronage of Tudor kings, Henry's arrival produced an outpouring of popular support against the supposed tyranny of Richard's rule, somewhat undermined by the relatively small army he was able to raise. When looking at the events of 1485, it is important to consider that, in the years after Bosworth, all the accounts were written with the aim of legitimizing Tudor rule, especially by smearing Richard. The most notorious of the accusations against Richard is that he had his young nephews, Edward IV's sons, murdered in the Tower of London. While no actual evidence of the boys' fate exists, it is supposed that Richard would have wanted to eliminate other possible claimants to the throne. However, there is no evidence that there were even rumors of the boys' murder until after Richard's death, and another nephew, the son of Richard's elder brother George, received Richard's protection and was even named his heir.8 When Henry VII made his legal case for the kingship after Bosworth, he accused Richard of the conventional tyranny but did not mention murder. In evaluating Richard as a strategist, it is important to consider his record as a leader. During his brother's campaign to regain the throne, Richard, at age nineteen, commanded a wing of his brother's army at the battle of Tewkesbury in 1471. He was then appointed to rule the northern third of the country for the remainder of Edward IV's reign and did so well enough that northern England remained a center of opposition to Henry VII for years after his accession.
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